A shuttleless weaving loom with a weft insertion device. A transfer device and retaining disc are connected to the weft insertion device such that the retaining disc holds the weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it traverses through the shed of the loom. A plurality of sensors which are part of a microcircuit are mounted on the retaining disc for measurement of the weft fiber's position. A signaling circuit is mounted on the shuttleless loom and an electrical connector is connected to the signaling circuit to allow for external monitoring or display of the weft fiber's position. The measurements from the plurality of sensors are communicated through the electrical connector to an external device such that the position and orientation of the weft fiber can be monitored or displayed as the weft insertion device travels through the shuttleless loom.
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7. A weaving apparatus comprising:
a shuttleless loom;
a weft insertion device attached to the shuttleless loom;
a weft fiber feeding system attached to the shuttleless loom which feeds weft fiber to the weft insertion device;
a transfer device connected to the weft insertion device which traverses the shed of the shuttleless loom;
a retaining disc which is attached to the transfer device;
wherein the retaining disc holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed;
wherein the transfer device and retaining disc draw the weft fiber through the shed of the shuttleless loom to the other side of the shuttleless loom in said fixed orientation, release the fiber in said fixed orientation and return to the weft insertion device's original position.
1. A weaving apparatus comprising:
a support frame;
a plurality of heddles attached to the support frame;
wherein the heddles hold warp threads in an alternating manner to create a shed through which a weft fiber can be inserted;
a weft insertion device connected to the support frame and positioned at the opening of the shed so that it can travel across the shed to the opposite side of the support frame;
a weft fiber feeding system mounted on the support frame;
a transfer device connected to the weft insertion device;
a retaining ring which is attached to the transfer device;
wherein the retaining element picks a weft fiber from the weft fiber feeding system and holds the weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels with the weft insertion device;
a fiber removal system connected to the support frame on the side opposite the weft insertion side;
wherein the fiber removal system removes the weft fiber from the retaining ring of the transfer device when the transfer device and weft insertion device reach the side opposite of the insertion point;
wherein the weft fiber is placed into the weave of the warp yarns in said fixed orientation after removal from the retaining ring and the transfer device and weft insertion device return to the insertion point for picking another weft fiber.
16. A weaving apparatus comprising:
one of the following shuttleless looms:
a loom with a single rapier arm;
a rapier loom with at least two rapier arms;
a projectile loom;
a weft insertion device attached to the shuttleless loom;
a weft fiber feeding system attached to the shuttleless loom which feeds weft fiber to the weft insertion device;
a transfer device connected to the weft insertion device which traverses the shed of the shuttleless loom;
a retaining disc which is attached to the transfer device;
wherein the retaining disc holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed;
a microcircuit integrated with the retaining disc, transfer device, and weft insertion device;
a plurality of sensors which are part of said microcircuit and are mounted on the retaining disc for measurement of the weft fiber's position;
a signaling circuit mounted on the shuttleless loom for transmitting the measurement signals to external monitoring or display equipment;
an electrical connector mounted on the shuttleless loom and connected to the signaling circuit to allow for external monitoring or display of the weft fiber's position;
wherein the measurements from the plurality of sensors are communicated through the microcircuit, the signaling circuit and the electrical connector to an external device such that the position and orientation of the weft fiber can be monitored or displayed as the weft insertion device travels through the shuttleless loom;
wherein the transfer device and retaining ring draw the weft fiber through the shed to the other side, release the fiber and return to the weft insertion device's original position.
20. A loom of dual rapier arm type comprising:
a giver arm attached to the loom on the side where the weft fiber is fed to the loom;
a taker arm attached to the loom on the side opposite of the weft fiber feeding system;
a transfer device connected to the giver arm device which traverses the shed of the loom;
a weft fiber feeding system attached to the loom which feeds weft fiber to the transfer device on the giver arm;
a retaining disc which is attached to the transfer device;
wherein the transfer device is fitted to the giver arm in its default position at the weft fiber feeding side of the loom so that a weft fiber is fed into the retaining disc;
wherein the retaining disc holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed;
one set of projecting pins, the taker projecting pins, attached to the taker arm side of the transfer device;
one or more capture arms attached to the taker arm;
wherein the capture arms capture the taker projecting pins when the giver arm meets the taker arm in the middle of the shed of the loom and the transfer device can slide longitudinally along the frame of the giver arm such that it travels with the taker arm after capture, drawing the retainer disc and weft fiber through the width of the loom's shed;
a spring loaded deflection plate attached to the giver arm;
one or more return arms connected to the deflection plate which are operationally associated with the deflection plate such that when the deflection plate is down with the spring compressed, the return arms are down and when the spring forces the deflection plate up, the return arms are raised into their return position;
wherein the default position of the return arms and deflection plate is the down position when the transfer device is on the giver arm at the side of insertion and the return arms and deflection plate move to the up position when the transfer device moves from the giver arm to the taker arm after the rapier arms meet in the middle of the loom's shed;
a pinion connected to the hub of at least one of the return arms;
a rack engages the pinion and the operation of the pinion on the rack translates the rotation of the return arms to a linear movement of the rack such that the rack moves along the longitudinal direction of giver arm;
an actuator shaft connected to the rack which moves linearly along the longitudinal direction of the giver arm such that the actuator shaft extends beyond the end of the giver arm when the return arms move to the up position;
an actuator lever attached to the taker arm such that the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm can move the actuator lever when the giver arm and taker arm meet;
wherein the actuator lever is operationally associated with the capture arms of the taker arm such that when the actuator lever is moved by the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm, the capture arms move and release the taker projecting pins on the transfer device;
a set of projecting pins, the receiver projecting pins, connected to the giver side of the transfer device such that when the giver arm and taker arm meet, the return arms are in a position to capture the receiver projecting pins and return the transfer device to the giver arm.
4. The apparatus of
5. The apparatus of
6. The apparatus of
8. The apparatus of
9. The apparatus of
a microcircuit mounted on the retaining disc and transfer device;
a plurality of sensors which are part of said microcircuit and are mounted on the retaining disc for measurement of the weft fiber's position;
a signaling circuit mounted on the shuttleless loom for transmitting the measurement signals to external monitoring or display equipment;
a means of connection between said microcircuit mounted on the transfer device and said signaling circuit;
an external monitoring or display connector attached to the shuttleless loom and connected to the signaling circuit;
wherein the said means of connection between the microcircuit and said signaling circuit transfers the signal from said plurality of sensors to said external monitoring or display connector when the transfer device is moving through the shed of the apparatus.
10. The apparatus of
11. The apparatus of
12. The apparatus of
14. The apparatus of
15. The apparatus of
17. The apparatus of
a giver arm attached to the shuttleless loom on the side of the weft fiber feeding system;
a taker arm attached to the shuttleless loom on the side opposite of the weft fiber feeding system;
a transfer device fitted to the giver arm in its default position on the weft fiber feeding system side of the loom;
wherein the transfer device slides longitudinally along the frame of the giver arm;
one set of projecting pins, the taker projecting pins, attached to the taker arm side of the transfer device;
a number of capture arms attached to the taker arm;
wherein the capture arms capture the taker projecting pins when the giver arm meets the taker arm in the middle of the shed of the shuttleless loom and the transfer device travels with the taker arm after capture, drawing the retainer disc and weft fiber through the width of the shuttleless loom's shed;
a spring loaded deflection plate attached to the giver arm;
a number of return arms connected to the deflection plate which are operationally associated with the deflection plate such that when the deflection plate is down with the spring compressed, the return arms are down and when the spring forces the deflection plate up, the return arms are raised into their return position;
wherein the default position of the return arms and deflection plate is the down position when the transfer device is on the giver arm at the side of insertion and the return arms and deflection plate move to the up position when the transfer device moves from the giver arm to the taker arm after the arms meet in the middle of the shed;
a pinion connected to the hub of at least one of the return arms;
a rack engages the pinion and the operation of the pinion on the rack translates the rotation of the return arms to a linear movement of the rack such that the rack moves along the longitudinal direction of giver arm;
an actuator shaft connected to the rack which moves linearly along the longitudinal direction of the giver arm such that the actuator shaft extends beyond the end of the giver arm when the return arms move to the up position;
an actuator lever attached to the taker arm such that the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm can move the actuator lever when the giver arm and taker arm meet;
wherein the actuator lever is operationally associated with the capture arms of the taker arm such that when the actuator lever is moved by the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm, the capture arms move and release the taker projecting pins on the transfer device;
a set of projecting pins, the receiver projecting pins, connected to the giver side of the transfer device such that when the giver arm and taker arm meet, the return arms are in a position to capture the receiver projecting pins and return the transfer device to the giver arm.
21. The loom of
a microcircuit mounted on the retaining disc and transfer device;
a plurality of sensors which are part of said microcircuit and are mounted on the retaining disc for measurement of the weft fiber's position;
a signaling circuit mounted on the loom for transmitting the measurement signals to external monitoring or display equipment;
a means of connection between said microcircuit mounted on the transfer device and said signaling circuit;
an external monitoring or display connector attached to the loom and connected to the signaling circuit;
wherein the said means of connection between the microcircuit and said signaling circuit transfers the signal from said plurality of sensors to said external monitoring or display connector when the transfer device is moving through the shed of the apparatus.
22. The loom of
23. The loom of
24. The loom of
25. The apparatus of
26. The apparatus of
one or more heddles attached to the shuttleless loom to hold the warp threads woven into the cloth;
wherein one or more warp threads are fed and held in a warp yarn direction fixed orientation.
27. The apparatus of
one or more heddles attached to the shuttleless loom to hold the warp threads woven into the cloth;
wherein one or more warp threads are fed and held in a warp yarn direction fixed orientation.
28. The apparatus of
one or more heddles attached to the loom to hold the warp threads woven into the cloth;
wherein one or more warp threads are fed and held in a warp yarn direction fixed orientation.
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A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever. The following notice applies to all documentation described below and to all drawings accompanying and made part of this document: © 2018-2019 James Tolle.
This application claims the benefit of priority of the provisional patent application No. 62/673,099, “Nanoconductor smart wearable technology and electronics”.
The field of the invention is loom apparatus for weaving yarns or threads in a fixed orientation, including rapier, projectile and air jet looms.
The purpose of this invention is to introduce a novel weaving apparatus that supports weaving of threads in fixed orientations. This invention is particularly suited for weaving of nanoconductor fibers with a fixed geometry and orientation within the fell and cloth of the fabric. The wearable nanoconductor technology which is described in the accompanying patent which claims benefit to the same provisional patent as the current invention herein is an example of a fiber intended for textiles which gains advantages from being woven with a fixed orientation in the fabric. Such nanoconductor fibers can take advantage of a fixed orientation among the weave to mate with other nanoconductor fibers or the novel electrical connectors contained in the provisional patent in order to create wearable, smart electronic circuits. The current invention intends to claim the novel loom and weaving apparatus which are also disclosed in the provisional patent for use with such nanoconductor fibers or other threads or fibers which benefit from being woven into a fabric in a fixed orientation.
A “thread” usually refers to a textile yarn which is composed of multiple “fibers”. The use of “thread-sized” means a size on the order of the cross-section of a typical single mono-filament fiber, much larger than the nanoscale geometry, with “thread-sized” used herein to depict a fiber or yarn size of 150 microns or larger. The terms “yarn”, “thread” and “fiber” may be used interchangeably in the disclosure of the invention. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, the use of one of these terms is not intended to exclude an embodiment which comprises one of the other terms and all such embodiments which are obvious to a person skilled in the art are intended to be within the scope of the invention and covered by its claims. When a “fiber” of fixed orientation is referenced, it should also be interpreted as covering any yarn, thread or fiber known to a person skilled in the art which can have a fixed orientation of any sort and, unless explicitly stated otherwise, includes multi-filament or mono-filament fiber.
Rapier looms typically involve the insertion of at least one arm (single rapier), the “giver arm”, through the shed of the warp yarn in order to pull a weft yarn to create the weave. The shed is formed out of warp yarn hung through “heddles” in alternating positions, forming an opening between all of the warp yarns through which the weft fiber can be drawn by the rapier arms. These looms can also be referred to as “reciprocating”, “tape”, “ribbon” or “shuttleless” looms in the prior art. “Shuttleless” is used herein to mean that the weaving apparatus does not comprise any shuttle device which is to be moved through the shed by hand. A dual rapier loom apparatus includes one rapier arm for insertion and a second rapier arm which moves through the shed of the loom from the opposite side of the loom, the “taker arm”, in order to meet the giver arm in the middle of the shed and to pull the weft yarn back to the opposite side of the giver arm. A projectile loom is similar to a single arm rapier in that the projectile carries the weft yarn through the shed from one side of the loom to the opposite side. However, in the case of a projectile loom, the projectile which carries the weft yarn is not connected to an arm, but travels across the loom through some means of propulsion, which may be due to force from the motion of a pick lever or, for other types of looms which are similar to projectile looms such as air-jet or multi-phase looms, the carrier of the weft yarn is propelled by other means. The following discussion of the prior art explains how these approaches do not adequately cover all the novel aspects of the current invention nor disclose an obvious means of addressing the making or usage of the current invention by someone skilled in the art.
Early looms are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,134,125, Hoff, U.S. Pat. No. 3,266,528, Liebchen, et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 4,427,037, Hill, which describe looms which transfer the weft yarn through the shed by means similar to rapier arms, including tapes, reciprocating bars or shuttleless loom with reciprocating rods, respectfully. These and similar prior art are similar to the rapier arm embodiment of the current invention, but they all fail to include the novel aspects of the current invention including the transfer device which both holds the weft yarn or fiber in a fixed orientation and transfers it across the width of the loom in that orientation and also fail to include any kind of electronic sensors borne with the rapier arm to monitor the position of the fiber with fixed orientation.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,810,526, Yamashita discloses a rapier loom apparatus which covers the design of an insert, or giver, rapier for use in a dual rapier loom. Although this prior art includes a rapier arm with moving parts with respect to the weft yarn carried by the rapier arm, this prior art does not teach or claim the novel transfer device or other moving parts of the current invention which support the transfer of the fixed weft yarn from the giver to the taker rapier arm or any other moving parts disclosed with the current invention associated with the transfer and return of the transfer device.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,124,783, Powell, et al., claims a yarn transfer system as part of a loom apparatus, which includes a piezo-electric trigger. The transfer system of Powell is based on parts that are fixed with the giver or taker arm for transfer of the yarn from one to another in a way which is more advantageous to highly accelerated rapier arms. But the parts on each arm in Powell's art do not actually transfer from one arm to another as in the transfer device of the dual rapier arm embodiment of the current invention. Powell also discloses a piezo-electric trigger, electronic circuit and photosensitive element as part of the transfer system. The nature and purpose of the electronic components of Powell's invention is markedly different than the electronic sensors and circuits of the current invention. Powell's electronics provide a trigger for actuation of the parts holding the yarn, which is unrelated to the electronic sensors used to measure position and orientation in the current invention. Furthermore, Powell's electronic circuit is fixed to a part and does not have to provide for continuation of function when a transfer device is passed from one arm to another. These are key differences which distinguish the current invention from the prior art in Powell.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,090,456, Kasahara, describes a rapier loom picking apparatus. It's scope is typical of the prior art which focuses on the insertion point of the loom. Kasahara discloses a picking and gripping apparatus at the side of the loom which feeds the pick of the loom and cuts it with moving parts local to the edge of the weave. It does not teach any part which moves with the arm like the transfer device of the current invention and none of the parts of Kasahara transfer a yarn in a fixed orientation across the shed of the loom. Although Kasahara claims a rack and pinion movement, it is restricted to the picking apparatus on the side of the loom and differs in nature and scope to the movement of parts in the current invention, which are moving relative to the moving rapier arms of the loom. For these reasons, the prior art in Kasahara or other picking inventions like Kasahara's does not relate to the current invention and fails to teach or anticipate any of the novel features of the current invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,640,316, Wakai, discloses improvements to an air jet loom which includes a carrier that carries flow velocity detector. Like the current invention, measurement sensors are carried across the width of the loom by a moving transfer apparatus which is instrumented for continuous measurement and which supports an electrical connection to the sensor throughout its motion. However, the purpose and type of sensor used in Wakai is substantially different than the sensor used in the current invention. Wakai's instrumentation is directed toward measuring the air flow in the channel of the air jets. This is markedly different than the instrumentation on the transfer device of the current invention, which uses a novel electronic sensor to measure and report the position or orientation of the weft yarn with respect to the body of the transfer device.
U. S. Patent Application 2018/0179675 A1, Dornier, Ltd, includes various means for measurement of the weft yarns for the purpose of controlling the drawing-off the woven fabric according to the width of the weft yarn. Although this prior art discloses various means of measuring the weft yarn, including optical scanning, acoustic, video image processing and tactile measurements, all such measurement arrangements occur at a fixed point near the insertion of the weft yarn. Dornier does not disclose a measurement device or arrangement which travels with the end of the weft yarn on the transfer device as in the current invention. Dornier's application also does not teach the use of an electronic measurement of the position of the yarn or fiber in the transfer device for the purpose of weaving a fiber with a fixed geometric orientation to the structure of the fabric, which is a novel aspect of the current invention.
As can be seen by the preceding review of the prior art and the background of the current invention, no single example of art achieves all of the novel features of the current invention. Furthermore, no person skilled in the art would see an obvious combination of this art in order to cover what is disclosed in the current invention, there is no teaching, suggestion or motivation in the prior art to combine the references, and a resulting combination would not be understood to produce predictable results by someone with ordinary skill in the art. The current invention is a novel and not obvious invention which comprises the following features which are key for solving the need for smart wearable electronics:
apparatus to insert a fixed thread or yarn through a weave
a transfer device which transfers the fixed thread or yarn across the shed
an element which holds the weft thread or yarn in a fixed position while it is transferred across the loom
electronic sensors which measure the position and orientation of the fixed thread or fiber as it moves through the shed
a connection between the electronic sensors and a signaling circuit which allows the measurement signals from the moving transfer device to be continuously reported to an external monitoring system or operator
a transfer device which delivers the end of a yarn or thread to the other side from the insertion point
an apparatus which returns the transfer device to the insertion point after transfer is completed.
The current invention of this application relates to an apparatus for weaving which transfers a yarn through the weave in a fixed orientation and its preferred embodiment is suited for use with a fiber or yarn as described in the related provisional application in which the orientation of the yarn must be fixed throughout all or part of the woven fabric. The remainder of this application is based on the description from the provisional application which discloses a nanoconductor fiber with a fixed geometry which is integrated with clothing through the use of different loom apparatus that transfer the fiber across the shed in a fixed orientation. The current patent application relates to the apparatus described in the provisional application which supports the integration of the nanoconductor fibers in the cloth. Although the description from the provisional application specifically covers nanoconductor fibers, the intent of the current invention is to include any fibers or threads which need to be transferred across the width of a weaving apparatus in a fixed orientation or position.
The present invention discloses nanoconductor electronics and technology which is more fully integrated with textiles for garments of clothing or other applications. For wearable electronics to be fully integrated with the weave of a cloth or garment, the components have to approach nanoscale geometries. Limitations of previous wearable conductors arise because they are based on metallic threads or textile fibers that are coated or impregnated with conductive material, all of which fail to achieve dimensions smaller than the weave of the textile. In order to achieve a nano-scale conductor which can integrate within the weave of the clothing, typical electrospinning techniques are used to create a metalized nanoconductor matrix to start the fabrication of the invention.
The present invention utilizes the novel geometry of a nano-scale geometry to support textile weaving of the nanoconductor into the weave of the garment or cloth. The disclosure's novel fabrication process allows a nanoconductor structure of any length along the fiber used. This supports the integration of the nanoconductor across the length of a garment or only within a region of the cloth. The intention of this invention is to cover all configuration and sizes of clothing or other fabrics integrated with the technology comprising the invention which are obvious to anyone skilled in the art and such configuration and sizes are within the scope of the invention and are covered by the its claims.
The present invention also discloses novel technology based on the uniform geometry of the nanoconductor structure which allows connection of the conducting surfaces of the textile with electrical contacts and wires to outside circuits. Furthermore, the weaving of the fixed geometry of the nanoconductor structures also support the integration of electronic and semi-conducting components within the circuit of the wearable technology which allow the present invention to disclose applications of the wearable nanoconductor electronics as “smart” circuits or technologies which have features and properties that can be tailored to different user applications. The intention of this invention is to cover any and all types of electronic circuits, applications and technology based on the integration of the invention with an article of clothing which are obvious to a person skilled in the art and all such applications are within the scope of the invention and are covered by its claims.
As a summary of the invention, the invention is weaving apparatus comprising a support frame with a plurality of heddles attached to the support frame, wherein the heddles hold warp threads in an alternating manner to create a shed through which a weft fiber can be inserted. A weft insertion device is connected to the support frame and positioned at the opening of the shed so that it can travel across the shed to the opposite side of the support frame. A weft fiber feeding system is mounted on the support frame next to the opening of the shed so it can feed the weft insertion device. A transfer device Is connected to the weft insertion device and a retaining element which is attached to the transfer device picks a weft fiber from the weft fiber feeding system and holds the weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels with the weft insertion device to the opposite side of the apparatus. A fiber removal system is connected to the support frame on the side opposite the weft insertion side, wherein the fiber removal system removes the weft fiber from the retaining ring of the transfer device when the transfer device and weft insertion device reach the side opposite of the insertion point. The weft fiber is placed into the weave of the warp yarns in a fixed orientation after removal from the retaining ring and the transfer device and weft insertion device return to the insertion point for picking another weft fiber.
An alternative embodiment of the invention is a weaving apparatus comprising a shuttleless loom such as a loom with a single rapier arm, a rapier arm loom with at least two rapier arms, or a projectile loom. A weft insertion device is attached to the shuttleless loom and a weft fiber feeding system is attached to the shuttleless loom, which feeds weft fiber to the weft insertion device. A transfer device is connected to the weft insertion device which traverses the shed of the shuttleless loom and a retaining disc is attached to the transfer device, wherein the retaining disc holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed. The transfer device and retaining disc draw the weft fiber through the shed of the shuttleless loom to the other side of the shuttleless loom, release the fiber and return to the weft insertion device's original position.
Yet another embodiment of the current invention is a weaving apparatus comprising a shuttleless loom such as a loom with a single rapier arm, a rapier loom with at least two rapier arms, or a projectile loom. A weft insertion device is attached to the shuttleless loom and a weft fiber feeding system is attached to the shuttleless loom, which feeds weft fiber to the weft insertion device. A transfer device is connected to the weft insertion device which traverses the shed of the shuttleless loom and a retaining disc which is attached to the transfer device holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed. A microcircuit is integrated with the retaining disc, transfer device, and weft insertion device. A plurality of sensors which are part of said microcircuit are mounted on the retaining disc for measurement of the weft fiber's position. A signaling circuit is mounted on the shuttleless loom for transmitting the measurement signals to external monitoring or display equipment and an electrical connector is mounted on the shuttleless loom and connected to the signaling circuit to allow for external monitoring or display of the weft fiber's position. The measurements from the plurality of sensors are communicated through the microcircuit, the signaling circuit and the electrical connector to an external device such that the position and orientation of the weft fiber can be monitored or displayed as the weft insertion device travels through the shuttleless loom. During the monitoring, the transfer device and retaining ring draw the weft fiber through the shed to the other side, release the fiber and return to the weft insertion device's original position.
Another embodiment which summarizes the current invention is a loom based on dual rapier arms comprising a giver arm attached to the loom on the side where weft fiber is fed to the loom, a taker arm attached to the loom on the side opposite of the weft fiber feeding system, and a transfer device connected to the giver arm device which traverses the shed of the loom. A weft fiber feeding system is attached to the loom which feeds weft fiber to the transfer device on the giver arm. A retaining disc is attached to the transfer device and when the transfer device is fitted to the giver arm in its default position at the weft fiber feeding side of the loom, a weft fiber is fed into the retaining disc. The retaining disc holds a weft fiber in a fixed orientation as it travels through the shed. One set of projecting pins, the taker projecting pins, is attached to the taker arm side of the transfer device and one or more capture arms are attached to the taker arm. The capture arms capture the taker projecting pins when the giver arm meets the taker arm in the middle of the shed of the loom and the transfer device slides longitudinally along the frame of the giver arm such that it travels with the taker arm after capture, drawing the retainer disc and weft fiber through the width of the loom's shed. A spring loaded deflection plate is attached to the giver arm and one or more return arms are connected to the deflection plate, which are operationally associated with the deflection plate such that when the deflection plate is down with the spring compressed, the return arms are down. When the spring forces the deflection plate up, the return arms are raised into their return position. The default position of the return arms and deflection plate is the down position when the transfer device is on the giver arm at the side of insertion. The return arms and deflection plate move to the up position when the transfer device moves from the giver arm to the taker arm after the rapier arms meet in the middle of the loom's shed. A pinion is connected to the hub of at least one of the return arms and a rack engages the pinion. The operation of the pinion on the rack translates the rotation of the return arms to a linear movement of the rack such that the rack moves along the longitudinal direction of giver arm. An actuator shaft connected to the rack which moves linearly along the longitudinal direction of the giver arm such that the actuator shaft extends beyond the end of the giver arm when the return arms move to the up position. An actuator lever is attached to the taker arm such that the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm can move the actuator lever when the giver arm and taker arm meet. The actuator lever is operationally associated with the capture arms of the taker arm such that when the actuator lever is moved by the extended actuator shaft of the giver arm, the capture arms move and release the taker projecting pins on the transfer device. A set of projecting pins, the receiver projecting pins, is connected to the giver side of the transfer device such that when the giver arm and taker arm meet, the return arms are in a position to capture the receiver projecting pins and return the transfer device to the giver arm.
The preferred embodiment of the current invention discloses an apparatus which weaves a weft fiber of a fixed orientation into a cloth. However, any other embodiment based on a combination of weft and warp fibers of fixed orientation which is obvious to a person skilled in the art is intended to be within the scope of the current invention and covered by its claims. Furthermore, the preferred embodiment discloses a retaining disc which is disc-shaped and holds a fiber in a slot. A retaining disc or element of any other shape or design which would hold a fiber or thread in a fixed orientation as it is pulled by the transfer device which is obvious to a person skilled in the art is intended to be within the scope of the current invention and covered by its claims.
The description of the current invention relies on the following drawings. These drawings are not to scale, contain only enough detail for descriptive purposes, and are intended to aid in understanding of the invention and the concepts and methods of how it is made and how it is used with the accompanying specification.
The front view of the transfer device is shown in
A side view of the transfer device is presented in
Alternative embodiments of the loom apparatus enabling the invention are given in
The other arm which receives the transfer device in a dual rapier loom is shown in
A close-up of the giver arm after the transfer is shown in
As used in this specification, the terms “nanoconductor”, “nano-scale conductor”, “nanoconductor fiber”, “nanoscale fiber”, “nanoconductor geometry”, and “nanoscale geometry” refer to a conducting structure of nanometer scale comprising a combination of metalized, electrospun or similar nanoconductor and a larger textile fiber, such structure running for lengths from centimeters to up to 3 meters of continuous fabric thread.
The term “smart wearable”, “smart technology”, “smart electronics”, “smart circuits” or “smart” refers to electrical circuit or circuits which are integrated with the fabric of the clothing and can be configured to support different circuit paths, electronic applications, or user applications after the technology is woven into the garment. These terms also may be used to refer to the nano-scale integrated components which allow changes to the behavior of the electronic circuits integrated with the clothing.
The following description of the current invention includes the Description of the Preferred Embodiment as well as a description of alternative embodiments and several examples of how the invention can be made and used. Any other use or application of the invention or methods for how it is made which are not specifically contained within this disclosure which are obvious to a person skilled in the art or science are intended to be covered by the current invention.
The invention consists of wearable, smart technology which is fully integrated into articles of clothing, an example of which is shown in
The foregoing description provided a few examples of how the invention can be fully integrated with an article of clothing. The remainder of the description will disclose the novel design of the invention beginning with how it can be fabricated and continuing with a description of its materials and geometry and how the smart technology comprising the invention supports various novel applications based on its design.
An alternative method for fabricating the nanoconductor structures of the invention is disclosed in
A novel feature of the geometry shown in
The foregoing description disclosed the preferred embodiment of a weaving apparatus, which is based on a single rapier arm loom. Alternative embodiments of the invention include other types of looms or apparatus which can use the transfer device 704 to insert the nanoconductor fiber 705 into the weave of the cloth. Other types of looms which would support these alternative embodiments include projectile, air jet, multiphase and hand looms, and all such looms which are modified to use a device such as the transfer device 704 in any way which is obvious to a person skilled in the art in order to weave the nanoconductor fiber 705 as an integrated part of the cloth are intended to be covered by the scope of the present invention and covered by its claims. Other types of looms which do not allow for the insertion of a fiber in a fixed orientation, such as water jet looms, are not within the scope of the present invention.
The alternative embodiment which is based on a projectile type loom is shown in
The preferred embodiment disclosed above is based on a single rapier arm loom. An alternative weaving apparatus for this invention is a modified dual rapier arm loom.
The other rapier arm of the dual rapier arm embodiment is shown in
The apparatus embodiments presented in
Yet another alternative embodiment of the invention which uses a different method to fully integrate the nanoconductor fibers and technology of the invention within the weave of the user's garment is a single pull needle approach.
Embodiments of the invention which include various ways to fully integrate the nanoconductor fiber and tecnology of the invention with a wearable garment have been disclosed herein. Although some specific examples and designs for apparatus and other methods which can be used to fully integrate the invention with wearable apparel have been given, the intention of this invention is to cover all apparatus and means which can be used to integrate the invention into a wearable fabric or garment and which are obvious to anyone skilled in the art. Such other apparatus and means of integration of the invention into a wearable fabric or garment are within the scope of the invention and are intended to be covered by its claims.
In
The current invention comprises smart applications which can only be achieved using the novel geometry and integration of the nanoconductor fibers with the fabric of the garment. One embodiment of the invention's smart applications is based on a configuration of multiple nanoconductor fibers within a region of a garment which provides power to smart components integrated with the wearable electronics of the invention. The “smartness” of these applications relates to the ability to tailor the invention's capabilities to the user's intended use of the integrated, nanoconductor circuit. In one embodiment, the invention allows the micro-miniature electronic components to be added as discrete components during integration with the garment in order to tailor the invention to support a specific application for the user. An alternative embodiment allows micro-miniature logic circuits to be integrated with the nanoconductor power runs such that the function of those devices can be re-configured by the user for specific applications.
An alternative embodiment creates smart applications in the current invention based on the 2 power rail design shown in
Another embodiment of the invention's smart applications, which is the preferred embodiment, is based on a lattice 1500 of nanoconductor fibers that have been integrated with a garment and programmable components which are integrated in the lattice 1500.
In the preferred embodiment, the RS-485 connection between the configuration master 1501 and nodes of the lattice 1500 allow for the smart application of the invention to be programmed by configuration signals to individual nodes. The communication component 1503 of each node is connected to two nanoconductor fibers that provide the RS-485 bus 1502 as shown in
In
An alternative embodiment of the invention's smart applications is shown in
Another alternative embodiment of the invention is based on a lattice with nodes supporting different functions.
The foregoing disclosure has described the current invention in considerable detail, including a preferred embodiment or embodiments. Notwithstanding this fact, other embodiments of the current invention are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the accompanying claims should not be limited to the preferred or other embodiments disclosed herein. Unless the accompanying claims explicitly contain the phrases “means for” or “step for”, the provisions of 35 USC § 112(f) are not intended and 35 USC § 112(f) should not be applied to interpret the claim's limitations. All features described in this specification and its accompanying claims, abstract, and drawings may be replaced by an alternative feature which serves the same purpose or a similar purpose, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
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